Exploring outdoors:Arkansas' open-air classrooms

Arkansas' nickname "The Natural State" reveals a statewide commitment to the outdoors.
Arkansans weave the wilderness into their lives by embracing, protecting and exploring
the state's natural beauty.

Northwest Arkansas claims some of the most beautiful terrain in the region. Our gentle
hills, wild rivers and deep caves lure national attention to the pristine and well-preserved
Ozark Mountains.

Parade magazine named Fayetteville, home of the University of Arkansas, one of "America's
Most Beautiful Towns" in 2012. The city's ample parks and the emerging inter-city Northwest Arkansas Razorback Regional Greenway offer opportunities to appreciate natural beauty in the city.

But if your tastes range further afield, the university provides a perfect basecamp
for outdoor adventures that begin less than an hour away.

Students can reach the Ozark National Forest in fifteen minutes, the famed caves and
bike trails of Devil's Den State Park in half an hour, or float America's first national
river, the Buffalo River, in less than a hour.

Wilderness Connection

The university's Outdoor Connection Center provides wilderness equipment and guided
excursions to explore many of the caves, rivers and woods that exemplify the region's
beauty.

The center began in the 1970s in the Arkansas Union under the leadership of recreation
teacher Rodney Ryan and student Hank Harmon, the center's first director. Early on,
university students understood the call of wild places and created a place where it
could become part of any student's education in the Natural State.

The center now encompasses 2,000 square feet in University Recreation's main HPER
building.

"This fall we are offering 45 different outdoor programs. Normally, we offer 50 to
75 programs per academic year," said center director Jennifer Hazelrigs. "The community
and culture is there and wants to be active."

Into the Ozarks

Former university student Tim Ernst makes a living documenting the state's hiking
trails and natural beauty through numerous trail guides and picture books.

"There are vast wild forest areas in northwest Arkansas filled with some of the most
beautiful intimate landscapes found anywhere in the United States. Thundering waterfalls,
towering bluffs, wildflowers, lush forests, wildlife, scenic vistas, whitewater and
quiet emerald pools - and tons of solitude - all waiting for those who want to get
off the pavement and explore." - Tim Ernst

The Ozark National Forest offers more than one million acres of managed wilderness
to be explored. Ernst wrote the Ozark Highlands Trail Guide that provides the definitive
mile-by-mile description of what an explorer will find in this protected forest.

The Devil's Den

“We have a lot of frequent flyers,” said Randall Schwab, who works the front desk
at Devil’s Den State Park.

“Some students come out every weekend on a day trip, or sometimes tent camping. During
the fall, it’s a really pretty time. … We’ll see a lot of them.”

Mountain biking, hiking trails and caving are just some of the activities enjoyed
by students who visit the state park. The park also boasts 17 fully equipped cabins
and 143 campsites that allow for a quiet retreat for a few days.

Some cabins date back to the era of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal when
the Civilian Conservation Corps first tamed the valley surrounding Lee Creek.

The Battle for the Buffalo River

Students today enjoy the country's first "National River" because of the conservation
efforts of alumnus Dr. Neil Compton.

He and others thwarted the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' plan to build dams along
the natural waterway.

That effort in the early 1960s is documented in the book, The Battle for the Buffalo
River: A Conservation Crisis in the Ozarks, published by the University of Arkansas
Press.

Students now float 135 miles of protected beauty along the river because of Compton
and others. President Richard Nixon named the Buffalo River a "National River" in
1972.

Depending on the time of year and water levels, expect still pools of cool and deep
water, exciting rapids and high rock bluffs to meet you along the many bends. Pioneer homesteads still exist and sand bars provide numerous spots to set up an
overnight camp next to the water.

Alumni often fondly remember spring breaks and long weekends in the Ozark Mountains
where their University of Arkansas experience extended far beyond the books and into
the wild.

By Christopher Spencer University of Arkansas

Outdoor Connection Center offers outdoor community

The center also provides regular excursions if you want to enjoy the call of the wild
with others. Professional staff lead kayak trips, camping, mountain biking rides and
climbing workshops on a monthly basis.

Campers will again enjoy the natural beauty of the Grand Canyon during Thanksgiving
this November. It's an annual four-day backpacking trip where students enjoy turkey,
stuffing, mashed potatoes and pumpkin pie around a campfire under the Arizona stars.

Center staff plan trips in January to the Everglades National Park in Florida and
Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado.

"My favorite trip I have ever taken was the caving trip to Mammoth Caves," student
Kyrie Leaf said. "At one point, you had to lay on your stomach, tilt your head sideways
and pull yourself with your fingers and push with your toes. It was terrifying and
amazing at the same time."